Title
Apuseni-Djerdap pilot area
License
Not Specified
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Abstract

The map presents the data collected within the ConnectGREEN Project that was implemented between June 2018 and October 2021. The data were collected in accordance with the “Methodology for identification of ecological corridors in the Carpathian countries by using large carnivores as umbrella species” (Okanikova et al, 2021) developed within the ConnectGREEN Project.

The pilot area included Apuseni Mountains and South Western Carpathians in Romania and  National Park Djerdap in Serbia. The objective of fieldwork in the pilot area was to maintain / restore ecological corridors secure a viable population of large carnivores in the Carpathians. The selected joint approach was meant to accelerate the implementation processes and put into practice much-awaited infrastructure developments that faces the risk of being delayed due to non-conformity with safety and environmental standards. In the thematic map you can find data about road permeability, animal tracks, occurrence data about large carnivores and prey species and where the camera traps were located.

More information about the ConnectGREEN Project can be found on the official project website https://www.interreg-danube.eu/approved-projects/connectgreen

ConnectGREEN’s 2nd pilot area stretches across south-western Romania from the Apuseni Mountains in the north along the Carpathian arc across the border into Serbia. The area is a regional biodiversity stronghold and, consequently, boasts a large number of national parks, protected areas and Natura 2000 sites. The Romanian segment of the pilot area has the highest concentration of national parks in the entire country. Even non-designated areas that do not benefit from a specific protection regime display levels of biodiversity worthy of national park status in other regions of Serbia or Romania. Across the Danube in Serbia lies Djerdap National Park, covering some 63,786 hectares. It is the only area in Serbia covered by the Carpathian Convention. All three European large carnivores ̶ bear, wolf and lynx, can be found in the project area. The region is, however, also the focus of several large infrastructure projects which threaten to disrupt the animal migration routes between individual core habitat areas, thus endangering the ecological connectivity between the southern Carpathians and the remainder of the mountain ranges to the north.

In the course of ConnectGREEN, 180 monitoring sites were monitored in the Apuseni Mountains over a period of several months with the help of more than 20 wildlife cameras. In the south-western Carpathian section of the pilot area, the team also used a set of over 20 cameras to monitor specific points. The cameras were left at each site for a minimum of 2 weeks, during which time all passing animals were recorded. These monitoring sites cover all bottleneck areas that were previously identified by the team in a modelling of ecological connectivity in the Carpathians. In Djerdap National Park, 14 cameras were set up in 3 critical zones and left there for several months. In the Apuseni section of the pilot area alone, the camera traps captured a passing bear on 58 occasions, while a wolf was seen 32 times. Further south along the Carphatians, the cameras caught wolves on film 12 times as well as 5 individual bears. These results confirm that many of the identified corridors are actively used by wildlife, even those which enter into close proximity to the highway. The field team was also heartened to discover that several of the ecoducts constructed in the area over the past years have been accepted by local wildlife. In Djerdap National Park, wildlife cameras captured a passing bear 1 time, lynx 2 times, and wolves 140 times.

Contact for the pilot area is Andrian Grancea [email protected]  and Cristian Remus Papp [email protected]

Publication Date
Keywords
Category
Environment
Environmental resources, protection and conservation. Examples: environmental pollution, waste storage and treatment, environmental impact assessment, monitoring environmental risk, nature reserves, landscape.
Regions
Global
Responsible
More info
-
Language
English
Supplemental Information

Contact: Andrian Grancea [email protected] and Cristian Remus Papp [email protected]

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